Following the path of Marco Polo, photographer Frédéric Lagrange captures the challenges and beauty of everyday life in an unforgiving land.

YOU GET OLDER faster in the Wakhan Corridor. The harshness of life—the wind, the constant work of farming and herding, the below-freezing temperatures 340 days out of the year—is etched onto the faces of the native Wakhi and the nomadic Kyrgyz, the Muslim peoples who have lived for generations in this remote pocket of land jutting out of northeastern Afghanistan. Deep in some of Central Asia’s highest mountain ranges, the narrow 200 miles of the Wakhan Corridor are bordered by Tajikistan, China, and Pakistan, as well as mainland Afghanistan, which is so far removed from daily life in the Wakhan that it is often referred to as a foreign country. In the local dialect, the region is called Bam-e Dunya, the roof of the world. And from the moment French photographer Frédéric Lagrange heard of the place, all he could think of was how to reach it.

A Wakhi priest invited Lagrange and his team for lunch in his home as they made their way east across the corridor. “I found the Wakhi to be the most hospitable people,” Lagrange says. “They have nothing, but they give everything.”

It all began with A Short Walk in the Hindu Kush, the 1958 account of a trek through northeastern Afghanistan written by a mild-mannered-Londoner-turned-adventurer named Eric Newby. When Lagrange read the book more than a decade ago, he was immediately captivated by Newby’s descriptions. But it would take Lagrange years to carve out a month to trek the Wakhan Corridor with four Wakhi porters, an Afghan guide, several donkeys, and 100 rolls of film. In the late winter of 2012, the group set out.

Kyrgyz women wear ornate costumes with headdresses—white for married women, red for unmarried. “Since there are so few Kyrgyz in Afghanistan,” Lagrange says, “they work to keep their customs alive. Considering how they live, dealing with livestock every day, I found it impressive to have so much pageantry.”

Since Marco Polo’s voyage into the Wakhan Corridor in the late 1200s, few Westerners have made the trip along this part of the old Silk Road. Lagrange was the first in six months to cross the Tajik border into Afghanistan. The land is “a last frontier,” he says. “That’s why it became an obsession. I had to go there to witness it, to feel what it is. I had no expectations. I wanted to get it out of my system. And I wanted to come back alive.”

The Wakhan’s beauty is rivaled only by its extreme inaccessibility. “The advancements of modernity come at a very slow pace,” says Lagrange. Doctors and schools are scarce. Homes are yurts or mud huts. There is no cell phone service, no television, no Internet. Such isolation means that the Wakhi and Kyrgyz live much as they have for hundreds of years, but the trade-offs, Lagrange learned from local Wakhan leaders, can be grave: high infant mortality rates; opium addiction; a staggering number of women who die in childbirth. Sometimes there is barely enough food to make it through the long winters.

“There’s nothing that protects you in the Wakhan,” says Lagrange. “There’s a fragility you feel because the elements get to you directly. It’s an incredibly challenging place.”

After the 1949 Communist takeover of China, the Chinese border of the Wakhan Corridor was sealed off, turning what had been a centuries-old thoroughfare into a dead end. In the high plateaus near Lake Chaqmaqtin, Lagrange walked by the graves of travelers who had passed through hundreds of years ago.

But everyday life in the Wakhan proved to be Lagrange’s inspiration. He usually trekked 15 miles a day, he says, “interacting with the people around me as much as possible, but also trying to step back to be able to observe and catch elements of life without disrupting them.” Lagrange shot photographs and footage that became a 20-minute film, Lost on the Roof of the World (part of which is shown at top). “I was purely living in the moment,” he says, “observing and recording as much as possible.”

In the four days Lagrange spent in a Kyrgyz winter camp, he was “basically stealing slices of lives” with his photos. “I had no connection to the people. I was a complete foreigner,” he says. After a day of shyly avoiding him, this young girl finally let Lagrange get close enough to take her photo.

In the expedition’s final days, the team paused to rest in the Daliz Pass. “I could see the Wakhis’ love of their surroundings by the fact that they never took anything for granted,” Lagrange says. “They always took the time to slow down and observe.”

Lagrange waited until he was back home in New York three months later to develop the film. “I rarely think of my work this way, but I was really touched by it,” he says. “It was deeply moving to be there as a human being, but the imagery, professionally, was beyond my wildest expectations. There’s a certain legacy there—of giving a voice, a face, and dignity to those people. And to Afghanistan.”

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Hans van Roon

About Me

My fascination for these subjects started in the '80 's by reading the book of Peter Hopkirk about the travels and explorations of Aurel Stein in Central Asia at the beginning of the 20th century.
Over the Silk Road through Central Asia, the Taklamakan Desert, Bokhara and Samarkand I arrived in the 13th century and followed the building of a world empire by Genghis Khan, his sons and grandsons.
His most famous grand son was Khubilai Khan and with him I ended in the Yuan Dynasty in the time when Marco Polo visited China and since than I never stopped reading again

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